"Jim Dine: Last Year's Forgotten Harvest" represents the first exhibition to focus on Dine’s portrayal of his family and friends. Jim Dine: Last Year's Forgotten Harvest, organized by the Bowdoin ...
Jim Dine, "The Studio (Landscape Painting)" (1963), oil on canvas with wooden shelf and painted glass, tin, ceramic, and wood, 61 x 108 1/2 x 10 3/4 inches (all images courtesy 125 Newbury gallery) ...
The Richard and Carol Cocks Art Museum dedicates itself to crafting informative and captivating exhibitions that engage in dialogue with and about visual culture. Exhibitions celebrate and recognize ...
Perhaps the best—and nearly unavoidable—way to start an exploration of the new Jim Dine artwork at the Chazen Museum of Art is with the six-foot-tall sculpture of a human skull sitting outside the ...
Feeling the urgency to create even after more than six decades, 88-year-old Jim Dine doesn’t take holidays as there is just too little time, preferring instead to put his hands to work each day to ...
122 x 92 cm. (48 x 36.2 in.) Jim Dine's art has become strongly associated with his very personal circle of motifs. Recurring motifs include hearts, tools, brushes and Pinocchio. The painting, 'Mr.
Jim Dine is an American artist, a key figure in the pop art movement. Known for his use of everyday objects, including tools, robes, and hearts, Dine's work combines personal iconography with pop art ...
Through March 21. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Tuesdays-Fridays, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturdays. Alan Avery Art Company, 315 East Paces Ferry Road. 404.237.0370, www.alanaveryartcompany ...
Opening the exhibition is a self-portrait by the artist, completed recently. Reflecting on his long career, Dine observes: “I’m interested in the passage of time. I don’t mean metaphysically; I mean ...